We amplify the voices of out-of-school children, their families and communities through powerful storytelling.
We deliver curriculum-aligned educational content directly to children who cannot access formal schooling.
We hold governments, institutions and communities accountable for the right of every child to education.
We connect educators, policymakers, NGOs and communities to collaborate on solutions for the education crisis.
VoxEduTV was founded in 2023 out of a deep conviction that Nigeria's education crisis — with over 10 million out-of-school children — demanded a dedicated media response. Traditional media had largely ignored this story. We decided to tell it ourselves.
Starting as a digital-first platform, VoxEduTV quickly grew into a full TV and radio operation, partnering with FM stations across the country to broadcast educational content in Hausa, Yoruba and Igbo — reaching communities that mainstream media had forgotten.
Today, VoxEduTV is Nigeria's only dedicated educational television platform, producing documentaries, live events, policy journalism and daily educational programming for children, parents, teachers and policymakers.
VoxEduTV founded and launched as digital platform
First documentary — "Invisible Classrooms" released
FM radio partnerships established in 3 states
National Education Summit hosted in Abuja
Hausa, Yoruba & Igbo language broadcasts launched
UBEC news auto-crawler and live TV stream launched
Education advocate with 3 decades of experience in child rights and media across Nigeria.
Award-winning journalist and documentary filmmaker focused on education in Northern Nigeria.
Full-stack developer and broadcast engineer with expertise in live streaming and media platforms.
NGO specialist with extensive networks across government, civil society and development partners.
Senior journalist covering education and rights issues across the North-West and North-East.
Education reporter covering Enugu, Anambra, Imo and Rivers States for VoxEduTV.
Working together to end the out-of-school children crisis in Nigeria